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Massaker der Türkei in Smyrni/Izmir

Red kein Unsinn Mond war auch sonst ein Symbol für Frauen...

- - - Aktualisiert - - -

Der armenische Arzt Garabed Hatscherian war einer der wenigen Überlebenden des Massakers, in dem im September 1922 in Smyrna (heute Izmir) etwa 150.000 Griechen und Armenier von der türkischen Armee des Mustafa Kemal Pascha Atatürk niedergemetzelt wurden.
Krass. Mit Lenin, Hitler, Kemal damals... eine blöde Zeit.
 
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Musst du immer Olivenöl ins Feuer gießen?

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Ursprung des materiellen Lebens, Sternenstaub.
Anfang des Liedes: Od zvjezdanog praha finog
Mjesec zlatne broševe kuje = Aus schönem Sternenstaub
schmiedet der Mond goldene Broschen
TurkishFlag.jpg
 
das ist quatsch,die turken benutzen den halbmond mit stern schon seit dem altturkischen reich der gokturken als symbol und herrschaftszeichen

eine muenze von den gokturken
url




dieses symbol haben sie dann einfach uebernommen in ihr neues osmanisches reich...






Seit wann münzten die Göktürken denn eigene Münzen? Gab es in den weiten Ebenen Turkmenistans 900 n.Chr. denn schon Einkaufscenter? Oder gab es in Kirgistan vor 1000 Jahren schon Münzstätten? Wohl kaum, da brauchte man auch keine Münzen. Das bissl Tauschgeschäft konnten die Göktürken damals nach guter mongolischer Manier auch mit Kimiz, Trockenfleisch und Vieh abwickeln. ;-)

Heraclius
 
Seit wann münzten die Göktürken denn eigene Münzen?
Heraclius

hier mehr info ::lol:

[h=1]Coin discovery sheds light on Turkic civilization[/h] ANKARA - Turkish Daily News

Göktürk find refutes claims that the Turkic peoples were merely plunderers and barbarians
Ancient coins from the first known Turkic culture, the Göktürks, have been discovered during archeological excavations in Kyrgyzstan, Uzbekistan and Tajikistan, reported the Doğan News Agency.
Associate Professor Yavuz Daloğlu, an instructor at Dokuz Eylül University who presented the findings of historian Dr. Babayar Gaybullah to the public, stated that claims asserting that the Göktürk people did not have any structure of governance have been proven wrong by this discovery. He commented that this discovery refutes claims that the Turkic peoples were merely plunderers and barbarians.
Daloğlu, who attended the Second International Turkish Civilization Congress sponsored by Kyrgyzstan-Turkey Menas University in Bishkek on Oct. 4-6 2004, met with Uzbek historian Gaybullah. Daloğlu began studying coins from ancient Turkic civilization brought to the congress by Gaybullah and came across the Göktürk pieces, which he had never seen before. He said these were an important discovery in the history of Turkic civilization. Stating that he was familiar with coins from the Selcuk and Ottoman eras, he said he had never heard nor read that the Göktürks had minted coins of their own. On one face of the coin was the likeness of a khan in the center with three stars and a moon on the edges.
Coins belonging to the Türgiş of the eighth century, after the Göktürks, had previously been discovered, but the Göktürk coins date from approximately 150 to 200 years earlier, around A.D. 576-600. This discovery is as important as the discovery of Orhun script. Money is used where social trade and economy exist, indicating an important contribution to world civilization.

The coins are believed to be in Sogd, Baktri and Pehlevi script with titles such as Kağan, Hatun, Yabgu, Tegin Tudun, Tarhan and Elteber. The various levels of authority can be understood from observing these coins, as the names of state officials are engraved beside the khans' names. Daloğlu stated that important information has come to light with the studies conducted on these ancient coins.

TURKEY - Coin discovery sheds light on Turkic civilization
 

Danke, Nur diese Fragen, dann bitte wieder zum Thema.

aber:

1) hast du auch unabhängige Quellen dazu?

2) wo steht auf den Münzen das es den Gogturgen gehört hat

3) Ist es auf der Münze der Halbmond, erkennt man schlecht, hast du ein besseres Bild

4) Hatten die Römer nicht früher auf ihre Münzen den Halbmond und den Stern?
 
Das Massaker von Phocea

The Massacre of Phocaea (Greek: Η Σφαγή της Φώκαιας, I Sfagí tis Fókaias) occurred in June 1914, as part of the ethnic cleansing policies of the Ottoman Empire.[SUP][1][/SUP] It was perpetrated by irregular Turkish bands against the predominantly ethnic Greek town of Phocaea, modern Foça, in the east coast of the Aegean Sea. The massacre was part of a wider anti-Greek campaign of genocide launched by the Young Turk Ottoman authorities, which included boycott, intimidation, forced deportations and massive killings.[SUP][2][/SUP] and was one of the worst attacks of this campaign.[SUP][1]

[/SUP]
On June 25, the Danish consul of Smyrna, Alfred Van de Zee, quoted an eyewitness of the destruction:[SUP][1][/SUP]
[W]ithin a quarter of an hour after the assault had begun every boat in the place was full of people trying to get away and when no more boats could be had the inhabitants sought refuge on the little peninsula on which the lighthouse stands. I saw eleven bodies of men and women lying dead on the shore. How many were killed I could not say, but trying to get into a house of which the door stood ajar I saw two other dead bodies lying in the entrance hall. Every shop in the place was looted and the goods that could not be carried away were wantonly destroyed.
Massacre of Phocaea - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RdGTPmbsNhU
 
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